Work Life Play with Aaron McHugh
Destroying the programs that do not serve us to pursue purpose and happiness.
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
A mindset of abundance isn't so easy to find.
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
A navigation lesson recorded in the Colorado wilderness featuring renowned guide "Pathfinder" Dave Eitemiller. A video of this experience is .
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
A state or a phase of transition, on the threshold of something new.
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
Rilke says, "Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer."
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
On the road to impossible, how to sustain our ability to create impact and performance.
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
Confusing our worth our usefulness.
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
The words we speak are our prayers.
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
Inspired from George Ella Lyon's "How to write a poem" exploring the question, where am I from?
info_outlineWork Life Play with Aaron McHugh
Finding ecstatic joy in life's adventures.
info_outlineToday, I'm in the interview seat again. Today's topic Friendship and the journey of life impossible to accomplish alone. (Carl Richards) Greetings from the Joy Bus. My name's Carl Richards, and I am your host today of the Work Life Play podcast. I've taken over from Aaron. It was an invitation, but I fully accepted the invitation to interview Aaron somewhere around. We're, we're talking ten years now.
Aaron:
Ten years.
Carl Richards:
And 200+ some-odd episodes. So, Aaron, welcome to the show.
Aaron:
Thank you. I like it. We're in the Joybus. Carl's in the seat you always held for the guests, but you are interviewing me this time.
Carl Richards:
What would I like to start on? It strikes me, and this is a strange place to start, but I'm going to go there anyway. Talk to me about friendship a bit.
I want to pull in David Whyte's poem on friendship. David writes, "The ultimate touchstone of friendship is not improvement neither of the other nor the self. The ultimate touchstone is witness the privilege of having been seen by someone and the equal privilege of being granted the sight of the essence of another. To have walked with them, to have believed in them. And sometimes just to have accompanied them for however brief a span on a journey impossible to accomplish alone."
Show notes: https://www.aaronmchugh.com/podcast/friendship-the-journey-impossible-alone/
Keep going,
Aaron